Contionary:att

Gothevian

Etymology

Inherited from Gothic 𐌰𐍄𐍄𐌰 (atta). Cognate to Dutch ette, Alemannic German Ätti, Latin atta, Albanian atë, Bulgarian отец (otec).

Pronunciation

Noun

att (attm (plural attš, definite áttyn, relational adjective áccɛin)

  1. father, dad
  2. (colloquial, vocative) father (clergyman)
    Synonyms: èrkyn att (ɛ́rkyn att), ɛkkléšɛin att (ɛkkléšɛin att)

Declension

Declension of att
Masculine singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative-accusative att
/at/
áttyn
/ˈa.tɨn/
attš
/atʃ/
áttaš
/ˈa.taʃ/
genitive-dative áttyš
/ˈa.tɨʃ/
átte
/ˈa.tje/
átten
/ˈa.tjen/

See also

Gothevian family terms
kun (kun, “family”) Male Female
parent att (att, “father”)
nursery: táta (táta)
aísy (aísy, “mother”)
nursery: máma (máma)
sibling brɔs (brɔs, “brother”) švíšty (švíšty, “sister”)
child šun (šun, “son”) dáwtty (dáwtty, “daughter”)
grandparent ásiš (ásiš, “grandfather”) ásižy (ásižy, “grandmother”)
grandchild bunn (bunn, “grandson”) búnny (búnny, “granddaughter”)
father's sibling cic (cic, “paternal uncle”) cícy (cícy, “paternal aunt”)
mother's sibling uv (uv, “maternal uncle”) úvy (úvy, “maternal aunt”)
sibling's child jɛf (jɛf, “nephew”) jèvy (jɛ́vy, “niece”)
cousin nis (nis, “male cousin”) nízy (nízy, “female cousin”)
spouse rykèk (rykɛ́k, “husband”) xanýmy (xanýmy, “wife”)
spouse's parent šair (šair, “father-in-law”) šaíry (šaíry, “mother-in-law”)
spouse's sibling šur (šur, “brother-in-law”) šúry (šúry, “sister-in-law”)
child's spouse žɛnt (žɛnt, “son-in-law”) žènty (žɛ́nty, “daughter-in-law”)